Record high for 95% LTV mortgage costs reached in September

The Genworth/Moneyfacts Mortgage LTV Tracker has revealed that extra borrowing costs for buyers with 5% deposits hit a record high in September due to an increasing price gap between 75% and 95% LTV mortgages.

Related topics:  Finance
Warren Lewis
12th November 2014
Graph Thing

The average 95% LTV two year fixed rate rose more than twice as fast as at 75% LTV in the six months to September, widening the price gap from 2.69% to a new record of 2.81%. Average 95% LTV rates remained more than double the 75% LTV average (5.27% vs. 2.46%).

Because the higher 95% rates are charged on the full loan, it leaves consumers implicitly paying a far heavier price in interest repayments for their extra borrowing above 75% LTV.

The equivalent rate for this extra borrowing reached a new record of 15.81% in September, rising by almost a full percentage point since March to within two percent of September’s average credit card rate (17.47%).

Comparing 95% to 75% LTV products, September’s price gap (2.81%) and extra borrowing rate (15.81%) were both the highest since records began. In contrast, the average price gap was just 0.25% from 1995-2008 while the extra borrowing rate averaged 6.84%.

In contrast, the price gap from 75% to 90% LTV fell between March and September 2014, reducing the extra rate for 90% LTV loans from 14.43% to 13.08%. But this still remained significantly higher than the cost of an unsecured personal loan, which averaged 9.26% for £5,000 loans and 4.97% for £10,000 loans during September.

Simon Crone, Genworth Vice President – Mortgage Insurance Europe, comments:

“Simply needing a high LTV mortgage is no real indication of someone’s credit quality, but these findings show homebuyers with a 5% deposit are being made to pay a rising premium that rivals the costs of unsecured borrowing.

The option for lenders to get capital relief through government or private insurance partnerships is supporting some of the more competitive rates on the market without sacrificing underwriting standards or compromising on financial stability.

High LTV borrowers will be left counting the cost of capital pressures on lenders until the use of insurance partnerships becomes more common across the market to satisfy regulatory requirements without burdening consumers in the process.”

Help to Buy 2 supporting almost half of 95% LTV products

Lenders have focused on the 85% and 90% LTV bands in the last six months, with these being the only categories to see product numbers grow since March alongside the implementation of the Mortgage Market Review (MMR).

However, the 95% LTV product range saw the most year-on-year growth with almost 100 extra products available in September 2014 compared with September 2013.
 

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